1. Silicon atoms manipulated in IBM study
- Author
-
Hooper, Laurence
- Subjects
International Business Machines Corp. -- Research ,Science (Periodical) -- Reports ,Nanotechnology -- Research ,Semiconductors -- Research ,Integrated circuits -- Research ,Scanning tunneling microscopy -- Usage ,Nanotechnology ,Semiconductor Device ,Miniaturization ,Packaging Density ,Science (Periodical) ,New Technique ,Integrated Circuits ,Business ,Business, general - Abstract
IBM researchers report, in the journal Science, that they have developed a technique that allows them to manipulate individual silicon atoms. IBM scientists already had demonstrated, in 1990, that they could manipulate individual xenon atoms, and they could do this so precisely that they were able to form a pattern in the shape of the company's logo. Circuitry in today's electronic devices is measured in microns, which is on a scale that is 1,000 times coarser than devices that might be built at the atomic scale, where devices and their components are measured in nanometers, or billionths of a meter. IBM's latest research was accomplished using a scanning tunneling microscope, which can be used to manipulate atoms with strong chemical bonds. Atoms of 'noble' elements, such as xenon, interact weakly with other atoms.
- Published
- 1991